Localization of ultrasound in a three-dimensional elastic network
H. Hu, A. Strybulevych, J.H. Page, S.E. Skipetrov, B.A. van Tiggelen

TL;DR
This paper reports the first experimental observation of sound localization in a three-dimensional elastic network, confirming theoretical predictions and revealing non-Gaussian transmission statistics.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental evidence of three-dimensional acoustic localization and compares results with the self-consistent theory of localization.
Findings
Observation of sound localization in 3D elastic networks
Detection of transverse localization in three dimensions
Transmission data matches self-consistent localization theory
Abstract
After exactly half a century of Anderson localization, the subject is more alive than ever. Direct observation of Anderson localization of electrons was always hampered by interactions and finite temperatures. Yet, many theoretical breakthroughs were made, highlighted by finite-size scaling, the self-consistent theory and the numerical solution of the Anderson tight-binding model. Theoretical understanding is based on simplified models or approximations and comparison with experiment is crucial. Despite a wealth of new experimental data, with microwaves, light, ultrasound and cold atoms, many questions remain, especially for three dimensions. Here we report the first observation of sound localization in a random three-dimensional elastic network. We study the time-dependent transmission below the mobility edge, and report ``transverse localization'' in three dimensions, which has never…
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